Current condition
Demolished / No longer exists
Date completed
(Day & Month are approximate.)
Date closed / demolished
(Day, Month, & Year are approximate.)
The building was completed in 1898, and was originally just known by its address: 2 Connaught Road
In 1939 it was sold to a new Japanese owner, and renamed: New Oriental Building
Later place(s) at this location
Comments
re: New Oriental Building
Not sure but this building may have had something to do with the New Oriental Bank that folded in the 1890s. The Bank was the first note issuing institution in Hong Kong.
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1910s Praya Central Buildings
Note the Butterfield and Swire Building was built in 1897 aprroximately the same period as the other buidlings east of Statue Square.
King's Building and the the GPO were completed in 1905 and 1911 respectively.
Telegraph Building
The Telegraph Building was constructed in 1898 and housed two telegraph companies: Eastern Extension Telegraph Company and the Great Northern Telegraph Company.
St George's Building
St. George's Building was completed in 1904.
The 1899 PWD AR says
The 1899 PWD AR says:
The handsome Offices of the United Telegraph Companies next the Hongkong Club were completed and occupied during the year, also a large block of buildings adjoining it on the East [ie this building], next to Messrs. Butterfield & Swire's Offices.
We've got a couple of sources above giving the completion date as 1898, so I'll leave it at 1898 for now.
I tried a search for 'oriental' in the HK newspapers, 1897-1899. I didn't find any mention of this building, though of course it may not have had this name originally.
New Oriental Building
I've set the dates:
Looks like the demolition
Looks like the demolition date should be earlier than my current guess of 1963. The building has already been demolished in this photo, estimated to be from 1954. I've set the demolition date to be 1953 - if anyone can confirm the date, please let me know. (I've tried searches for oriental building and new oriental in the newspapers for 1945-60, but no luck)
History of Building
2 Connaught Road (Later New Oriental Building)
Marine Lot 278 Acquired 12th October 1896 for HKD67,441
Completed 1898, designed by Architects Palmer & Turner
Originally four stories, 5th Story added mid construction due to strong demand from tenants
Offices for
Carlowitz & Co
Hamburg based China Export, Import and Bank Compagnie
German Club leased part of Top Floor as did Japanese Consulate
Sold 10th June 1939 to Toshihiko Eto
-possibly to spy on dockyards?
Mr Eto declared enemy alien after WW2, property passed to Hong Kong’s administrator of Japanese property
Became temporary headquarters of Hong Kong police until building in Arsenal Street was completed
Building sold in October 1954 to Kwong Hing Investment House
Demolished to become car parks until construction of Furama - I would change demolishment date to 1955-01-01
New Oriental Building
As mentioned above, Toshihiko Ito, a Japanese publisher purchased the New Oriental Building in June 1939. China Mail dated 26 June 1939 indicates the purchase of the building was connected, inter alia, with the establishment of an English language newspaper publication. On another photo from the same era the word "NIPPO.. " can be viewed in bold letters on the ground floor of the building. (Update: "NIPPO" was the cable address.)
In the photo below, the Japanese flag flies from the top floor of the consulate.
The name "New Oriental
The name "New Oriental Building" was likely intended to echo the New Order in East Asia theme that Japan was promoting at around the same time. That theme would be expanded to become the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
Post-War - New Oriental Building as Police Headquarters
Hong Kong Sunday Herald 1 June 1947
Before the war, all Hong Kong Police departments were at Central Police Station but at Liberation, its Administration Section moved to the HSBC Building. In October 1945, this department and several others moved into the New Oriental Building which had then come under the control of the Custodian of Property as an ex-Japanese owned newspaper office.
Altogether, ten departments of Police are housed, including the C.I.D., Special Branch, Fingerprint & Photographic Bureau, Immigration, Registration and Stores.
(The Hong Kong News also had its Head Office at 2 Nakasumiyoshi-dori [Connaught Road Central] during the Occupation.)
Sales in 1939
The comment above records the sale of this building to Toshihiko Eto on 10th June 1939.
IDJ posted this clipping from 1 June 1939 noting that the Carroll Brothers had bought the building, so it changed hands very quickly.
For some reason I missed…
For some reason I missed moddsey’s post about HongKong News in 2022 having its head office at 2 Nakasumiyoshi-dori [Connaught Road Central] during the Occupation. I always thought the HKN used former SCMP Chinese and Portuguese staff and the SCMP printing press for the production of HKN during the occupation and thus the HKN office was at the SCMP building in Wyndham Street? So were there 2 locations within Hong Kong for the HKN during the Japanese occupation? Anyone know more about this?
Re: Hongkong News
Yes, there were two locations initially.
The Head Office of the HongKong News was at 2 Nakasumiyoshi-dori [Connaught Road Central] whilst their Editorial and Business Offices were at 1-3 Wyndham Street (former SCMP).
However, sometime after April 1944, the Head Office had moved to Wyndham Street.
Copies of the Hongkong News can be viewed at: https://repository.lib.cuhk.edu.hk/en/item/cuhk-2623246-0
Thanks for the link HKN link…
Thanks for the link HKN link moddsey - fascinating glimpse into Occupation life, even though it’s just a handful of copies digitised for viewing.
For the Sunday July 26th 1942 edition on page 8 at the very end it stated that the newspaper was “Published by TOSHIHIKO ETO, Managing Director for the Hongkong News, at No. 2 Nakasumiyoshi-dori, Hongkong.”
The Hong Kong News 25th…
The Hong Kong News 25th December 1942 Special Supplement edition on page 21 has a photograph of the Chater Road face of the head office of the Hongkong News bedecked in commemoration of the first anniversary of the capture of Hong Kong.